Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Holocaust Denial in 2022

Foreign relations Committee calls WWII Killing of Jews "Genocide."

September 24, 2022,
Los Angeles, CA
Aris Janigian—staff writer

On Wednesday, September 23, The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 27 to 21 to condemn as genocide the mass killings of Jews in Germany during World War II. New Germany reacted angrily, recalling its ambassador from Washington and threatening to withdraw its support for the continuing War on Terror.

"America has crossed a line with this resolution," Foreign Minister Helmut Gottschalk said. "Petty domestic politics has trumped American national interests. The New German people can only take so much insult. We will see our next steps."

It was a harsh rebuke from one of America's closest allies, and sent shock waves through the White House. The resolution comes at a time when the United States is actively drumming up support for the War on Terror, and two deputies in the State Department departed for Berlin immediately after the vote in an attempt to forestall a diplomatic disaster. At home, Secretary of State Candid Price called the resolutionStill Waiting for Recognition: For the few remaining survivors of the Jewish tragedy, this year's resolution may be the last chanceStill Waiting for Recognition: For the few remaining survivors of the Jewish tragedy, this year's resolution may be the last chance "irresponsible."

In a Rose Garden press conference President Hernandez acknowledged the Jewish tragedy, but sternly warned against the resolution. "This is not the right time or the right place for this kind of resolution," Hernandez said.

Jews, along with the large majority of historians outside New Germany, say that from 1939 to 1945 the German Nationalist Socialist Party carried out a systematic campaign to kill as many as six million Jews in Europe. They claim the killings amounted to "genocide," a term that the New German government fiercely rejects.

New Germany acknowledges that between 1 and 1.6 million Jews died during the war, but contends that a vast majority of those deaths occurred in the throes of war when disease and starvation was widespread. According to New Germany the intent to exterminate Jews is historically unfounded. "There was a context for these events. Many Germans died and suffered as well, far exceeding the number of Jews. These were the sad unintended consequences of war."

Since the establishment of New Germany, the influential Jewish American lobby has sought acknowledgment of their ancestors' suffering. The authors of the resolution are from heavily Jewish districts in California and Florida and New York. They note that the United States must recognize the Jewish tragedy while the few remaining survivors are still alive.

Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee Gregory Demerdjian, a descendent of survivors of the Armenian Genocide, said, "These events must be characterized for what they were: genocide. It is well documented in our own national archives that genocide of Jews occurred during the Second World War. This is merely an acknowledgment of America's own understanding of the events during that time. None of this should be construed to mean that New Germany is in the least responsible for these deaths." Demerjian said that he would soon introduce a resolution reinforcing America's strong and lasting relationship with the New Germany.

The Jewish tragedy is a sensitive issue in New Germany. Under a progressive movement called "Identity Reformation," the New Germans have radically reconsidered what an older generation had taken for granted. Historians in New Germany argue that between the First and Second World War Germany was caught between JewishTaking Pride in Our Past: The New German government has insisted that the alleged genocide is simply not consistent with the nobility of German historyTaking Pride in Our Past: The New German government has insisted that the alleged genocide is simply not consistent with the nobility of German history industrialists and Jewish socialists intent on overthrowing the German state. "They wanted to destroy the country from within," said New German Ambassador Norbert Sommer. "It was a difficult time. Everyone regrets the death of Jews, but wartime choices had to be made to save Germany's very existence."

Today, New Germany rejects the verdicts of the Nuremberg Trials that found members of the Nazi party guilty of war crimes, pointing out that Germans admitted to those crimes under duress from the prosecuting Allies. "No document has ever been produced that shows that Hitler ordered the extermination of Jews," Sommer said. "Indeed, many attempts were made by Germans at the time to find a safe harbor for Jews, including some negotiations with Zionists in Europe. It is a total fallacy that there was anything resembling genocide."


Members of the House committee who voted against the resolution characterized it as unwarranted "meddling" in a foreign state's accounting of its own past. Representative Stefan Kohler said, "Maybe it was a genocide, maybe it wasn't. None of us here are historians. This was 92 years ago. All I know is that passage of the bill would cause real-time harm to real people."

Democratic Representative Richard Wechsler had stronger words: "You'd think with the War on Terror ongoing and all, the congress would find something better to do than rummage through the trash bin of history. What congress should be acknowledging is that when the rest of Europe has turned its back on America, New Germany has stood strong by our side."

After WWII, America provided Old Germany with massive economic support under the Marshall plan. Old Germany remained a strong ally of the United States, and in 2112 it began an accelerated militarization program. Virtually one-third of New Germany's GDP is devoted to military expenditure.

Since 2017, when President Harold Jones stepped up the War on Terror, America's relationship to the European Union has been severely strained. Germany is one of the only European countries with which the United States has strong diplomatic and military ties.

Under penal code 3001, a number of writers have been prosecuted and convicted for "insulting Germanness" after using the term "genocide" or "holocaust " to refer to the Jewish tragedy. In 2020, New German dissidents attempted to organize an academic conference in order to revisit the events of 1939-45 from a "Jewish perspective." The conference was cancelled when then-Foreign-Minister Helmut Gottschalk called the organizers "traitors."

Some Parliamentarians of the European Union, of which New Germany remains a nominal member, have argued that Germany should be censured for its view towards the Jewish tragedy. Other countries have decided to stay neutral, sharing the position of the United States that the events of that time should be left to historians to sort out.

"Let bygones by bygones," said Roland Young, Secretary of Defense. "In a time of war, the United States has precious few allies. We respect history, but the life of our society depends upon our strategic position vis-à-vis our enemies today."

Some Jews in New Germany say the house resolution would be counter-productive. Chief Rabbi of Munich Abraham Grynszpan said, "New Germany must come to terms with its own history. We resist pressure from foreign countries to set a timetable." Members of the Jewish community in America believe that German-Jews are defending their dwindling numbers inside Germany, and yet others believe that the existence of Israel is in peril should they speak out.

New Germany has no diplomatic ties with Israel, and has repeatedly called on Israel to renounce its "genocide" claims. Its satellite state of New Lebanon has closed its borders with Israel.

Last year, some diplomats perceived a softening in the New German stance when it called on Israel to establish a joint commission to study the wartime atrocities, but that perception has since been altered. In January of this year Herschel Mintz, the ethnic Jewish editor-in-chief of the New German daily Agon was murdered in the streets of Berlin for attention he drew to the Jewish tragedies. The accused murderer, a 17-year-old German, is currently on trial for the crime, but human rights groups believe that the New German Deep Police were accomplices to the murder, and prosecutors claim that evidence was been destroyed.

In 2021, New German novelist Otwin Polk was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. In an explosive interview with an Italian newspaper, he said "In New Germany today, nobody but me speaks of the killing of over six million Jews." Today Polk lives in exile.

Friday, October 26, 2007

RALLY 106: NATIONWIDE CALLING TO ALL WHO SUPPORT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION


With the recent developments regarding H. Res 106, we find ourselves in a CRITICAL juncture. It is our duty now to bring word out to the public and to the media exactly what type of ally Turkey is to the United States, and express the importance of properly characterizing the Armenian Genocide.

The Armenian Youth Federation has organized a series of coordinated rallies to take place NATIONWIDE on November 4th. It is extremely important for all Armenians and human rights activists to come out in support of H Res 106 and show the media and the world that this issue cannot be swept under the rug.

RALLY LOCATIONS:

- Los Angeles (Little Armenia, Hollywood Blvd. will be shut down)
- San Francisco
- Fresno
- Phoenix
- Houston
- Washington DC

Please encourage your friends, your families and anyone you know who is concerned with this issue to attend. Contact me AYF@AYFwest.org with any questions

Visit www.AYFwest.org for the flyer. Visit www.ANCA.org or www.HR106.com for the latest.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

GENOCIDE: An Inconvenient Truth

Genocide: An inconvenient truth

The Armenian genocide bill has been attacked by both the right and the left -- and it may make matters worse. But it's necessary.

By Gary Kamiya

Oct. 16, 2007 | It was the first holocaust, one of the worst crimes of the 20th century. In 1915, during World War I, the ruling political party under the Ottoman regime ordered the extermination of its Armenian subjects. At least 800,000 and as many as 1.5 million men, women and children were murdered or died of disease, starvation and exposure. The details of the genocide, as laid out in books like Robert Fisk's "The Great War for Civilization" and Peter Balakian's "The Burning Tigris," are harrowing. Lines of men, women and children were roped together by the edge of a river, so that shooting the first person caused all the rest to drown. Women were routinely raped, killed and genitally mutilated. Some were crucified. Children were taken on boats into rivers and thrown off.

The genocide was not carried out by the Republic of Turkey, which did not exist yet, but by the ruling party in the final years of the collapsing Ottoman regime. To this day the Turkish government has never acknowledged that what transpired was a monstrous and intentional crime against humanity. Instead, it claims that the Armenians were simply unfortunate victims of a chaotic civil war, that only 300,000 to 600,000 died, that Turks actually died in greater numbers, and that the Armenians brought their fate on themselves by collaborating with the Russians.

Most historians reject these arguments. The definitive case that what took place was a genocide has been made by Turkish historian Taner Akcam, who in the 1970s was sentenced to 10 years in prison in Turkey for producing a student journal that deviated from the official line. He sought asylum in Germany, and now is a visiting professor at the University of Minnesota. In his 2006 book, "A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility," Akcam offers overwhelming evidence that leaders of the ruling political party, the Committee of Union and Progress, planned the Armenian holocaust. There was no military justification for the genocide: Some Armenians did fight against the Ottomans, but relatively few. In fact, Akcam argues, the genocide was driven by the Ottoman thirst for revenge after devastating military defeats, the desire to end foreign interference by the great powers, and above all by the strategic purpose of emptying the Turkish heartland of Christians to ensure the survival of a Muslim-Turkish state. Akcam argues that had the Armenians not been exterminated, Anatolia, the heart of what is now Turkey, would probably have been partitioned after the war by the victorious (and rapacious) great powers. The modern state of Turkey was thus built in large part on the intentional destruction of an entire people -- a moral horror that combines elements of America's destruction of Indians and Germany's extermination of Jews.

The International Association of Genocide Scholars, the leading body of genocide researchers, accepts that the destruction of the Armenians fits the definition of genocide and has called on Turkey to accept responsibility. Leading U.S. newspapers, including the New York Times, accept the genocide description. Twenty-three nations, including Argentina, Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Russia and Uruguay, have also formally recognized that what transpired was genocide.

For decades, Armenian-Americans and human rights advocates have tried to persuade the U.S. government to officially recognize that the mass killings constituted a genocide. But strategic and national security considerations have always stopped Washington from doing so. For decades, Turkey has been one of America's most important strategic allies -- first as a bulwark against the USSR during the Cold War, then as a key partner in George W. Bush's "war on terror." The only officially secular state in the Muslim world, it is the most politically moderate, economically advanced nation in the region. A NATO member, with close ties to Israel, home to a U.S. base through which most of the supplies to American forces in central Iraq are flown, it is an indispensable U.S. strategic asset.

For these reasons, Washington has never wanted to offend Ankara -- and if there is one sure way to do that, it's by bringing up the Armenian genocide. Although there has been some progress in opening up the subject, it remains explosive in Turkey. Those who assert that the genocide took place can be arrested under a notorious law (still on the books) that makes "insulting Turkishness" a crime. (Nobel Prize-winning novelist Orhan Pamuk was convicted of violating this law.) In January 2007, the leading Turkish-Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink, was murdered because of his outspokenness on the issue, and state security officials were clearly involved. The genocide denial is not confined to official discourse: Most ordinary Turks, who have been taught a whitewashed official version of the slaughter, also deny it. Akcam and other historians say that because many of the Young Turks who founded the modern state were involved in the campaign, and the state was constructed on a mythical foundation of national unity and innocence, to bring up the Armenian horror is to threaten Turkey's very identity.

No American administration has ever dared to cross Turkey on this subject. But that may finally change. Last week, the House Foreign Affairs Committee, defying pleas from the Bush administration and a letter signed by all living secretaries of state, voted 27-21 for a resolution that would make it official U.S. policy to recognize that the slaughter of the Armenians was an act of genocide. The resolution is nonbinding, but after years of bitter lobbying, it is the closest the U.S. government has yet come to acknowledging the genocide. Speaker Nancy Pelosi has indicated that she will bring it to a vote before the House, which is expected to pass it; the bill's fate in the Senate is less certain.

The mere fact that the House Foreign Affairs Committee passed it, however, was taken by the Turks as a gratuitous insult. As it has done every other time this subject has come up, Ankara -- and the country at large -- reacted with fury. Furious demonstrators took to the streets, shouting invective against the United States. Just-elected President Abdullah Gul said, "Unfortunately, some politicians in the United States have once more dismissed calls for common sense, and made an attempt to sacrifice big issues for minor domestic political games ... This unacceptable decision of the committee, like similar ones in the past, has no validity and is not worthy of the respect of the Turkish people." Turkey's ambassador to the United States warned that the resolution's passage would be a "very injurious move to the psyche of the Turkish people"; he was immediately recalled after the vote to show Ankara's extreme displeasure. Turkish officials warned that if the full House voted for the resolution, U.S.-Turkish relations would be gravely damaged, perhaps for decades. Considering that in a Pew global poll taken in June, a staggering 83 percent of Turks said they had a negative view of America, and an even more staggering 77 percent said they viewed the American people unfavorably, any further deterioration in relations would indeed be grave. The head of Turkey's military warned that if the House passed the bill, "our military ties with the U.S. will never be the same again."

There is no doubt that the controversy comes at a delicate time, because of both internal Turkish politics and the situation in Iraq. The vote could trigger a Turkish response that would be highly injurious to American interests, not just in Iraq but throughout the Middle East. Turkey could close Incirlik Air Base, through which 70 percent of air cargo for U.S. troops in Iraq passes, and refuse to cooperate with Washington on the war.

But the most dangerous consequence would be a Turkish attack on northern Iraq. In a piece of exquisitely bad timing, the committee vote took place against the background of a mounting drumbeat of war talk from the Gul administration, which is under heavy domestic pressure to smash Kurdish militant group the PKK. Just days before the vote, Kurdish militants killed 13 Turkish soldiers near the Iraq border, one of Turkey's heaviest recent losses in the decades-long war. Turkish anger at the U.S. is largely based on Turks' correct belief that the U.S., desperate to preserve good ties with the Kurds, is unwilling to confront the Kurdish guerrillas. A major Turkish invasion of northern Iraq could destabilize the only calm part of the country, pit two U.S. allies against each other, threaten the American project in Iraq and destabilize the entire region. The U.S. has been leaning heavily on Ankara not to invade; the genocide vote could tip Gul over the edge.

Given these geopolitical concerns, heightened by the fact that the U.S. is at war, it's not surprising that some Republicans have accused Democrats, who have taken the lead on the bill, of endangering national security. (Some right-wing bloggers have accused Democrats of using the bill as an underhanded way to sabotage the war.) But opposition to the bill has come not only from the right but from the left. Writing in the Nation, Nicholas von Hoffman mockingly asked, "What's next? A resolution condemning Napoleon's invasion of Egypt and the slaughter visited on the Egyptians at the Battle of the Pyramids?" Von Hoffman attacked the bill's sponsors for self-righteous hypocrisy. British commentator Simon Tisdall made a similar charge in the Guardian, writing, "Imperial delusions die hard -- and once again the U.S. Congress is trying to legislate for the world."

Most Turkish academics toe the official line on the horrific events of 1915. But even some of those who accept that a genocide took place believe that passing the bill now is a bad idea. Yektan Turkyilmaz, a graduate student at Duke University, has the distinction of having been arrested by the Armenian KGB because his research led them to assume he was a Turkish spy. In fact, he is part of a new generation of Turkish scholars who reject their country's propaganda about what happened to the Armenians. In a phone interview from Duke, Turkyilmaz said, "This bill strengthens the hand of the extremists in Turkey, the xenophobes, the extreme nationalists. Yes, Turkish society has to face its past, to prevent any sort of repetition in the future. If I believed that this bill would force the Turkish government to acknowledge the truth, I would support it. But it won't."

For his part, "A Shameful Act" author Taner Akcam acknowledges the force of these pragmatic arguments -- but rejects them.

"Look, we can make a list of reasons why this resolution will make matters worse," Akcam said in a phone interview from his office at the University of Minnesota. "First, it explicitly politicizes the problem. Second, it makes a historic problem a diplomatic fight between the United States and Turkey. Third, it increases the aggressive attacks of the Turkish government against those inside and outside the country. Fourth, it increases the animosity and hatred against Armenians generally in Turkey. Fifth, it can never solve the problem. It aggravates the problem.

"OK, so we've made this list," Akcam went on. "But what is the answer? Whoever is against the resolution must show an alternative to the Armenian people. Unless you give an alternative policy, saying 'Shut up and stop' is not a policy. The Armenians don't have any options. As long Turkey criminalizes the past, as long as Turkey kills journalists, as long as Turkey drags its intellectuals from court to court, as long as Turkey punishes the people who use the G-word, as long as Turkey doesn't have any diplomatic relations with Armenia, as long as Turkey threatens everybody in the world who opens the topic of historical wrongdoing, it is the legitimate right of a victim group to make its voice heard."

Akcam dismisses the argument that the time was not yet ripe for the resolution. "You can use the timing argument forever and ever. Who will decide when the timing is right?"

But Akcam argues that a long-term solution requires much more than a U.S. resolution. He says two steps are necessary: Turkey and Armenia must establish normal relations, and Turks must learn that confronting their history does not threaten their Turkish identity, but strengthens it. This means that Turks should look at the conflict not as a zero-sum game in which any Armenian gain is a Turkish loss, but as a necessary part of the process of becoming a democratic nation. It's an approach to resolving bitter historical grievances called "transitional justice," and it has been effective in helping resolve historical grievances between Germany and the Czech Republic, within South Africa and in other places.

The Armenians, too, need to rethink their approach, Akcam said. In the new paradigm, the Armenian diaspora would present its policy not as being totally against Turkey, but for a new democratic Turkey. "Until now this was a conventional war between Turkey and Armenian diaspora, and congressional resolutions were the effective weapon in this conventional war," Akcam said. "What I'm saying is we should stop thinking in these conventional ways."

The U.S. could play an important role in helping both parties break the impasse, Akcam said, but it is hampered by its lack of credibility in the Middle East. He points to what he calls a "stupid distinction between national security and morality. If you follow the whole discussion in Congress, on the one side you have the moralists, who say that Turkey should face what it did. This doesn't convince most of the people in the Middle East because we know that these are the guys torturing the people in Iraq, these are the guys killing the Iraqi civilians there, these are the guys who haven't signed the International Criminal Court agreement.

"On the other side are the realpolitikers," Akcam went on, referring to the Bush administration and the foreign-policy establishment, like the secretaries of state who signed the letter opposing the resolution. "They say the bill jeopardizes the national interests of the United States, Turkish-U.S. relations, interests of U.S. soldiers in Iraq."

Akcam argues that both elements must be present to have an effective foreign policy. "The fact is that realpolitik, the U.S. national interest in the Middle East, necessitates making morality, facing history, a part of national security. The basic problem between Turks and Armenians is that they don't trust each other because of their history." Akcam's point is that unless the U.S. is willing to look unflinchingly at the region's history, and try to broker deals that address legitimate grievances, it will not be able to achieve its realpolitik goals.

"If America really has a strong interest in its national security and the security of the region, it should stop following a national security concept that accepts human rights abusers," Akcam said. "It doesn't work, it makes things worse in the region. And it supports perpetrators who have committed crimes in the past and are committing crimes today."

In the end, the debate over the Armenian genocide bill boils down to two questions: Is it justified, and is it wise? The answer to the first question is an unambiguous "yes." It is both justified and long overdue. The Armenian genocide is a clear-cut case of genocide, and the fact that the U.S. has avoided calling it by its rightful name for decades is shameful. Crimes against humanity must be acknowledged. Hitler infamously said, with reference to the Poles, "Who, after all, is today speaking of the destruction of the Armenians?" Historical memory must not be sold away for a few pieces of silver. No one would countenance allowing Germany to deny its guilt for killing 6 million Jews. Why should Turkey be let off the hook for a slightly earlier holocaust that took the lives of as many as 1.5 million Armenians?

The second question is trickier. As opponents argue, and even supporters like Akcam acknowledge, the bill may backfire in the short run. That outcome could be acceptable, as long as it doesn't backfire in the long run. Which raises the central question: What policies should the U.S. adopt to prevent the resolution from having long-term negative consequences?

It comes down to a question of moral credibility, something the U.S. is in notably short supply of in the Middle East. One of the stranger reversals wrought by Bush's neoconservative foreign policy has been the rejection by much of the left of a morality-based foreign policy. Angry at the failure of the neocons' grand, idealistic schemes, some on the left have embraced a realism that formerly was associated with the America-first right. But by throwing out morality in foreign policy because of the neocon debacle in Iraq, these leftists are in danger of throwing out the baby with the bathwater. The problem with Bush's Middle East policy hasn't been that it's too moralistic -- it's that its morality has been flawed and incoherent.

As Akcam argues, what is really needed are not just moral congressional proclamations, but actions that back them up. Of course the U.S. cannot and should not resolve all the problems of the world. But like it or not, we are the world's superpower, and we have the ability to use that power for good as well as ill. What is needed is active U.S. engagement to broker fair resolutions to the festering conflicts in the region -- between Turks and Armenians, Turks and Kurds, and Israelis and Palestinians. If the resolution was part of a new U.S. approach to the Middle East, one in which we acknowledged and acted to redress the historical injustices suffered by all the region's peoples, not just by our allies, the Armenian genocide bill could stand as an example not of American grandstanding but of American courage.

-- By Gary Kamiya

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Foreign Affairs Committee Vote

HOUSE FOREIGN AFFAIRS COMMITTEE ADOPTS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION


Clears Way for Full House Consideration of the Human Rights Measure

WASHINGTON, DC – With a vote of 27 to 21, the influential panel of the U.S. House of Representatives took a major step toward ending U.S. complicity in
Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide, adopting H.Res.106, the Armenian Genocide, over in intense campaign of threats and intimidation by the
Turkish government and its lobbyists in Washington, DC, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

The Committee decision opens the way for full house consideration of the measure.

“The Foreign Affairs Committee’s adoption today of the Armenian Genocide Resolution represents a meaningful step toward reclaiming our right - as Americans - to speak openly and honestly about the first genocide of the
20th Century, free from the gag-rule that Turkey has, for far too long, sought to impose on nation’s elected officials,” said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA. “As Americans, we must always remain free to speak openly about human rights and should never outsource our nation's foreign policy - or our morality - to another nation.”

Introduced on January 30th by Rep. Adam Schiff along with Representative George Radanovich (R-CA), Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) and Rep. Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI), the Armenian Genocide resolution calls upon the President to ensure that the foreign policy of the United States reflects appropriate understanding and sensitivity concerning issues related to human rights, ethnic cleansing, and genocide documented in the United States record relating to the Armenian Genocide. The resolution is cosponsored by 226 Members of Congress from 39 states. A similar resolution in the Senate (S.Res.106), introduced by Assistant Majority Leader Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Sen. John Ensign (R-NV) currently has 31 cosponsors, including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (D-NY).

Over the past nine months, Armenian Americans and human rights advocates have joined with Members of Congress in educating their colleagues about the Armenian Genocide and the importance of proper recognition of this crime against humanity. The ANCA has mounted several national grassroots initiatives including the highly successful “Click for Justice” and “Call for Justice” campaigns as well as the “End the Cycle of Genocide” Advocacy Days, cosponsored with the Genocide Intervention Network.

Additional information to follow.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

AYF Confronts Rep. Jane Harman



Los Angeles, CA - "With pride and patriotism, members of the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) confronted Congressman Jane Harman (D-CA-36) this weekend for her immoral role in the denial of the Armenian Genocide. It was discovered this week that the Congresswoman, while publicly endorsing H. Res. 106 (the Armenian Genocide Resolution), had secretly authored a letter on October 3, 2007 urging the Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee to kill that very same bill. (READ ENTIRE AYF PRESS RELEASE)

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

TARC Moderator’s Book Reveals Initiative’s Anti-Armenian Intent

By Harut Sassounian
Publisher, The California Courier

David Phillips, the moderator of the Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission, is about to publish a book that discloses the true motives of those who initiated and supported TARC.

Based on an advanced copy of Phillips’s book, "Unsilencing the Past: Track Two Diplomacy and Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation," analyst Emil Danielyan wrote two lengthy reports last week for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Here are some of the highlights of Phillips’s interesting revelations, as reported by Danielyan:

-- Phillips confirms that the US government was the driving force behind TARC. The idea was suggested to him by Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Marc Grossman, the number three figure in the State Department under the Clinton and Bush administrations. TARC held its first meeting in Vienna in early 2001.

-- Phillips acknowledges that the State Department provided "some of TARC’s direct costs." All of the sources of TARC’s funds and their uses have not been made public.

-- Phillips accuses Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian of reneging on his pledge to support TARC. Apparently, he would have preferred that Oskanian continue backing TARC, even after it became clear that TARC was a clever ploy to undermine the recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

-- Phillips bitterly complains: "Instead of standing by its commitments, the Kocharian government ran for cover." This made Phillips so furious that he slammed the Kocharian regime in an op-ed column in the Wall Street Journal by calling it "corrupt and inept," and accusing Pres. Kocharian of "running a mafia state."

-- Phillips attributes Oskanian’s change of mind on TARC to criticism from Armenian "nationalist circles." Once TARC’s anti-Armenian intent became clear, just about everyone in Armenia and the Diaspora opposed this sinister initiative. Shortly after TARC’s creation, one of its Turkish members, Ozdem Sanberk, even gave an interview acknowledging that the purpose of this initiative was to block the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

-- Gunduz Aktan, a Turkish member of TARC, who repeatedly and aggressively denies the Armenian Genocide, put his foot in his mouth by suggesting that an independent panel of experts review the facts of the Genocide. TARC engaged the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) for that purpose. Aktan boasted that he would "destroy" the ICTJ experts with his legal arguments during his testimony. Phillips says that Aktan appeared "nervous" after making his presentation. Aktan had good reason to be nervous. The ICTJ qualified the events of 1915 as genocide.

-- Trying to give importance to his own efforts, Phillips claims that Turkey came within an inch of opening its border with Armenia in the summer of 2003. Showing his political naiveté, Phillips says in his book: "I had hoped that Ankara would quietly open its border sometime during the dead of summer, when everyone was on holiday and not paying attention."

-- Phillips writes that when Turkey’s Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul came to Washington in July 2003, Secretary of State Colin Powell, Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice reminded him at every meeting that "the issue of genocide recognition was not going away. He was told that real progress was the best way of deflecting pressure." Not surprisingly, the US officials’ real intent for pressuring Turkey into opening its border with Armenia was not the improvement of Armenia’s economy, but the removal of the nettlesome Armenian Genocide issue from the agenda of the Congress.

-- As further evidence of the sinister intent of the Bush Administration, Phillips writes that Vice President Cheney personally intervened by lobbying against a congressional resolution that barely mentioned the Armenian Genocide. "Cheney worked the phones and was assured by [House Speaker] Dennis Hastert that [the resolution] would be kept from the House floor," Phillips says.

-- In an interesting revelation, Phillips reports that Pres. Kocharian was highly infuriated when the Armenian Genocide resolution was blocked by Pres. Clinton and Speaker Hastert. A month later, when Pres. Kocharian received Stephen Sestanovich, an assistant secretary of state in the Clinton administration, the Armenian President was "in a foul mood and railed against Clinton’s betrayal," Phillips says. This is yet another indication that Armenian officials, not just the Diaspora, care deeply about the Genocide issue.

-- Phillips reveals that he helped arrange the controversial February 2001 interview between Pres. Kocharian and prominent Turkish journalist Mehmet Ali Birand that "helped mollify [Turkish] concerns about Armenia’s intentions." Apparently, Phillips promised Pres. Kocharian that should he make conciliatory statements during the interview, the Turks would then open the border with Armenia. Pres. Kocharian kept his end of the bargain. Phillips did not or could not, since the border remained closed!

-- Phillips wrongly blames "Armenian nationalists" for both of his failures – inability to have Turkey lift its blockade of Armenia and collapse of the reconciliation efforts. Phillips refuses to acknowledge that his profound ignorance of Armenian-Turkish issues played a much greater role in his failures than anything said or done by so-called Armenian nationalists.

More on Phillips’s escapades, once we get hold of his book!

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Thursday, June 28, 2007

LA Times Managing Editor Doug Frantz Resign



Los Angeles Times Editor James O'Shea announced this morning that the newspaper's Managing Editor Doug Frantz will leave The Times.
Frantz gained notoriety in the Armenian community when in April he went out of his way to kill a story on the Armenian Genocide. The basis he used for killing the story were allegations that the Armenian American reporter, Mark Arax, who wrote the article had a “conflict of interest” on the subject and had circumvented the normal process for articles. Both of Frantz's accusations were proven completely baseless according to an internal investigation.
Frantz's accusations against journalist Mark Arax were discriminatory and unethical.
The Armenian National Committee of America was in discussions with Times officials and is tracking the situation closely and issued an action alert urging LA Times readers to call for Frantz's resignation due to this grave error in judgment.
“The ANCA is gravely concerned that a senior-level editor at the Los Angeles Times is seriously compromising journalistic and ethical standards, and possibly even breaking the law, by telling an Armenian American writer that he cannot report on the Armenian Genocide. The assertion, which documents seem to corroborate, is deeply troubling.” commented ANCA Western Region Board member Zanku Armenian at the start of this controversy.
Frantz's last day will be July 6. He did not offer an explanation for his resignation.
Visit www.asbarez.com for more on this developing story.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007


What Motivates Patriarch Mesrob's Political Rhetoric?

BY HARUT SASSOUNIAN

It is not always easy to figure out what prompts the Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople (Istanbul), Mesrob II, to make at times conflicting and controversial statements.
Those familiar with the oppressive conditions within Turkey understand full well that the Patriarch and his flock are hostages in the hands of the Turkish government. Consequently, it is clear that some of his statements are made under coercion and duress.
In April, when the Patriarch flew to Dallas to participate in a politically tendentious conference organized by a Turkish group, Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, the Primate of the Eastern (U.S.) Diocese, issued a press release expressing his opposition to this one-sided "Armenian-Turkish dialogue." The Primate said that the Patriarch "has a very limited ability to freely express his true thoughts and concerns because of oppressive Turkish free-speech laws."
Furthermore, in a letter dated April 12, 2007, to Dr. Gerald R. Turner, the President of Southern Methodist University, Primate Barsamian rightly described the Patriarch as "a virtual 'prisoner of conscience' of the Turkish government." Abp. Barsamian, who is originally from Turkey, knows well the situation of the Armenian community in Istanbul. His letter prompted the University to cancel its sponsorship of the conference.
However, not all of the Patriarch's political statements and actions are dictated by the Turkish government. Knowing what is expected of him, the Patriarch sometimes, without even being asked by Ankara, makes statements that he knows will please his Turkish masters. By doing so, he may be hoping that he would be in the good graces of Turkish officials, leading to the reduction of the government's oppressive measures toward the local Armenian community.
In his dealings with Turkish officials, the Patriarch may exploit the Armenian Diaspora's opposition to his pro-Turkish stance by telling the government that he risks losing all credibility unless genuine concessions are made to improve the conditions of the Armenian community.
At times, the Patriarch's actions completely baffle the Armenian public both within and outside Turkey. A couple of years ago, he disappeared from the Patriarchate for several weeks without any notice or explanation of his whereabouts. Despite the fact that Istanbul Armenians are fervently devoted to their church and clerical leadership, many members of his flock are not too pleased with his idiosyncrasies. He has publicly feuded with Catholicos Karekin II as well as the publishers of the local Armenian press, including Hrant Dink, the recently assassinated editor of Agos newspaper. Those who disagree with him describe the 51-year-old Patriarch as "highly intelligent, but brash."
Which of the foregoing three explanations account for the Patriarch's recent statement on the Armenian Genocide? During a meeting with a U.S. congressional delegation at the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul on May 30, the Patriarch told the visiting Members of Congress: "From the perspective of both Turkish-Armenia bilateral relations, and relations between the Armenians of Turkey and the Turkish public, we are not positive about the Armenian Genocide Bill before the US Congress. But we also don't deny historical facts. The position taken by the Party of Unity and Progress in punishing all Armenians of Turkey, and not just those Armenian groups who had taken up arms against the government, can never be forgiven. One and a half million Armenian citizens perished in the deserts of Syria, and today in our country there are only 70,000 Armenians. It should also not be forgotten that at the time of the deportation our ethnic Armenian citizens said they were Muslims in order to be saved from banishment. They still speak Armenian and live the Armenian culture, and we count them as part of us even if their religion is different."
Despite the fact that the Patriarch knew full well that the Turkish government and various Turkish ultra-nationalist groups would strongly object to his statement that 1.5 million Armenians were killed, he went ahead and posted his remarks in Turkish and English on the Patriarchate's official website. Not surprisingly, several Turkish denialists immediately criticized him and questioned his facts on the Genocide.
It is not clear why the Patriarch chose to make such candid remarks to the congressional delegation and then proceeded to make them public? Could this be his way of retaliating against the Turkish government's lack of responsiveness to his repeated pleas on behalf of the local Armenian community? In recent years, the Patriarch has said and done many things in support of Turkish interests, including his energetic lobbying on behalf of Turkey's application for membership to the European Union, without receiving anything in return to better the lot of his people.
The Turkish government should recognize that the Western world automatically dismisses the Patriarch's pro-Turkish efforts and statements, knowing full well that they are made under pressure. In fact, each time that the Turkish government forces the Patriarch to denounce the recognition of Armenian Genocide by foreign parliaments, Ankara inadvertently reconfirms the autocratic nature of its regime.
Diaspora Armenians must realize that if they want the Patriarch to play a more assertive role in defending Armenian interests, they should then develop sufficient political clout in Washington and other capitals in order to protect him and his community from any potential harm from Turkish hardliners. For example, the Chief Rabbi of Turkey knows that the Turkish leaders would not dare touch him or members of the Jewish community because there would rightfully be a powerful backlash from Israel, the United States and practically every European country. Can the Armenian government and the Armenian Diaspora provide a similar assurance to the Armenian Patriarch?
Meanwhile, there is no question that the Patriarch Mesrob II knows how to gauge Turkey's domestic political mood better than his detractors living abroad. Under the current situation of resurgent Turkish nationalism, the Patriarch may well adopt a hands-off posture by telling government officials that as a religious leader he can only make pronouncements on spiritual issues and abstain from involvement in political matters.



Friday, June 8, 2007 HARUT SASSOUNIAN

Friday, June 8, 2007

New National Assembly Convenes; Elects Leadership

YEREVAN (Combined Sources)--The fourth National Assembly of independent Armenia began its first session on Thursday with a collective oath of allegiance to Armenia's constitution.
The 131-member legislative body was greeted by President Robert Kocharian, as well as His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians who gave his blessing to the newly elected parliament and said a prayer.
The ceremonial part was followed by the election of parliament leadership. The sole nominee for the Speaker's post, Tigran Torosian, was installed in his former position due to the overwhelming backing of his Republican Party and its partners, Prosperous Armenia and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation.
Deputies voted in a secret ballot by 112 to 2 to allow Torosian to continue as parliament speaker.
The deputies also overwhelmingly appointed Prosperous Armenia's Ishkhan Zakarian and ARF's Vahan Hovannesian as deputy speakers.
Kocharian has congratulated Torosian on his reelection as chairman of Armenia's new parliament.
In a message to Torosian Kocharian said he is confident that Torosian will use his knowledge and experience to deepen the process of reforms and boost the country's progress.
Addressing fellow lawmakers, Vahan Hovannesian said he would continue to do what he did while serving as deputy parliament chairman over the last four years.
“If you find that I worked well, I will continue working in that manner, if not I will try to work better,” he said.
Hovannesian said a new political culture has emerged in Armenia with hostile radical political groups being left outside the National Assembly.
“Radicalism has no future and this parliament has become a hub of centrist forces,” he said.
The Republican Party of Armenia will have leadership in five of the nine committees, including the committee on education, science and culture, the committee on finance and crediting, the committee on state and legal issues (to be headed by ex-justice minister David Harutiunian), the committee on economic issues (headed by former environment minister Vartan Ayvazian) and the committee on health, environment protection and social issues.
Prosperous Armenia will lead the committees on human rights protection and public affairs and on European integration. And the ARF will lead the foreign relations and defense committees. ARF Supreme Council of Armenia representative Armen Rustamian will retain the chairmanship of the foreign relations committee, while former deputy defense minister and ARF parliamentary faction member Artur Aghabekian will chair the committee of defense and national security.
Also today, President Robert Kocharian accepted the resignation of the government, instructing its current members to continue in office until the formation of the new cabinet. By another decree he appointed Serzh Sarkisian Armenia's prime minister.
By the Armenian constitution, a new government must be formed within 20 days after the appointment of the prime minister and it will have 20 days to submit its program of action to the National Assembly for approval.
Under the coalition agreement between the Republican Party and Prosperous Armenia and their cooperation deal with the ARF, the president will have the prerogative of naming and recalling the ministers of foreign affairs, justice and defense. The ARF will have the same rights in two ministries--agriculture and education; Prosperous Armenia will have its ministers of health, urban development, youth and sport (a ministry separated from the former ministry of culture). The Republican Party will have its say in all the rest ministries.
Absent from the inaugural session were opposition lawmakers, including elected deputies from ex-parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian's Orinats Yerkir and ex-foreign minister Raffi Hovannisian-led Heritage party.
Hovannisian explained that the first session of the fourth National Assembly was to have taken place the previous day pursuant to the Constitution. He said that his Heritage party had not received, in a manner reflective of the rule of law, due notice of that session or any invitation.
Besides, he said, Heritage found it impossible to be present at any parliament session until the Constitutional Court decided on the validity of the parliamentary elections.
Both Heritage and Orinats Yerkir have not yet collected their parliamentary mandates at the Central Election Commission. Orinats Yerkir's Hovannes Markarian said their party is also waiting for the Court's ruling due before June 10, but said they will pick their mandates no matter what the final verdict is. “People trusted us in the ballot and the mandates are a vote of public confidence,” he explained.


Thursday, June 7, 2007 Asbarez

Saturday, June 2, 2007

In Turkey conspiracy theories actually hold because… (2)

EKREM DUMANLI; Zaman Gazetesi


In my previous article I mentioned that conspiracy theories are more believable in Turkey than any other country, mainly because its fundamental institutions -- politics, courts and media -- have been affected by shadowy connections. Many of these connections have been exposed during critical periods.
When the public hears of relations between the deep state and the mafia, they suspect something is wrong. They suspect changes in the social channels, diversions in political events and ultimately come to believe in many different conspiracy theories.

With less then two months before the elections, the recent developments in Turkey are once again supporting conspiracy theories. The majority of the public hold political engineering attempts responsible for these events, so it’s important that we examine the events that support this view.

Democratic channels in Turkey were operating smoothly until various criminal organizations were exposed in 2006. The first organization, the “Sauna Gang,” was discovered by mere coincidence. The owner of a sauna grew suspicious of her customers and informed officials. A brief investigation revealed that a group of people had formed an illegal organization to launch an unconventional war. Officers, retired police chiefs and a mafia leader were among the gang’s members. As soon as the group received media coverage some authorities said the case was independent of other developments. But only a few months later another criminal organization was discovered in Bursa with members that included a general, police official and a mafia leader. Four other organizations were discovered in 2006. Authorities later found maps, layouts to important businesses and addresses to strategic places.

In the Eryaman Gang operation, police confiscated plans of the homes of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his advisor Cüneyt Zapsu. The press reported that there were assassination plans included among the documents. Weapons and bombs seized in the operation reinforced those claims.

The Şemdinli incident was a turning point in Turkish politics. After 17 bombing attempts, the public found the bombers and their cars. An officer and a Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) informant were among those who had planned the bombings. The event sparked wide public attention, silenced after it was made a tool for political debates and conflicts. And the prosecutor who was leading the investigation was removed from office.

Other organizations such as the nationalist Kuvva-i Milliye have also formed in the past few years. This organization, disguised as a civil society organization, requires its members to swear, on the flag and weapons, to kill and die. Although these oath taking ceremonies have been broadcast on television, no prosecutor has filed a lawsuit against it, nor has any major media organization reported on this story. Officials prefer to remain oblivious to the matter because important members of the organizations were retired officers and such organizations are part of the political engineering process.

A few months ago Nokta newsweekly made striking claims. According to the documents Nokta retrieved, the General Staff had categorized journalists in the country as either pro-military or anti-military. The news was never denied and the only official response the public received was that the documents were still in draft form.

The magazine revealed more documents and claimed there were had been two planned coups, led by Gen. Şener Eruygur in 2004, against the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party). Eruygur, currently the president of the Kemalist Thought Association (ADD), never denied the claims. A police operation was launched against the magazine. Following several days of questioning, Nokta was forced to close down.

The reports in Nokta’s last edition were striking, yet it predicted today’s events flawlessly. The reports claimed that organizations would identify themselves as being “nongovernmental” and the AK Party government would be prevented from electing a president through the efforts of the those nongovernmental organizations and the media. Isn’t that exactly what happened?

The Turkish public, who know that the natural course of politics can be intervened in and psychological techniques can be used to push people to the streets, are very skeptical about the current political picture. They realize that nongovernmental demonstrations are not nongovernmental. They see the court as politically aligned. They think decisions are based on politics instead of justice.

This is not a result of groundless theory or skepticism. They know that three presidents, Özal, Demirel and Sezer, were elected with the same Constitution, but that the quorum of 367 is being strictly defended to prevent Abdullah Gül from becoming president. The public see the Constitutional Court’s approval of this double standard as political alignment.

While criticizing the AK Party, Higher Education Board (YÖK) President Erdoğan Teziç confessed “they’ve captured the government, now they want to take hold of the state.” That is what the fight is about. Those who see themselves as the owners of the state do not want to allow the democratically elected leading party to govern freely. When public support for the leading party increases, a bureaucratic oligarchy known as the “deep state” forms and seeks to paralyze the public’s will through political re-engineering.

Some members of important state institutions, including the justice system and military, are believed to support this deep state. As a result of secret alliances and dark organizations that form during this period, different events occur. This leads the public to question the validity and truth of events. They consider the possibility of covert plans and scenarios to control the public’s opinion. What do you think? Would you say the public is right?

Friday, June 1, 2007

NEW AYF CENTRAL COUNCIL ANNOUNCED: NIDUS

Sireli ungerner,

In cooperation with the AYF Eastern Region, we are pleased to announce the creation of the AYF Nidus Central Council. This group was established by AYF members and Armenian college students earlier this year to develop Armenia's medical field. The Nidus program will seek to connect Diasporan Armenians who study and have interest in the fields of medicine and public health, with an opportunity to directly aid our homeland.

The first goal of the council is to create and maintain an updated website with information on healthcare related issues. Furthermore, a need assessment will take place this summer to determine areas in which Armenians need increased awareness and education. The next step will be to use the data gathered to develop and administer health education lessons in various villages and cities. The long-term goal of Nidus is to develop a health education curriculum for elementary and junior high school students in Armenia, Artsakh and Javakhk.

This is a direct opportunity for those interested to utilize knowledge and education in a real world setting; assisting Armenia. All those with a background in biology, medicine, public health, public administration or other interest should join.

If you have any questions or if you are interested in participating in the medical or educational aspect of the Council, please email AYFNidus@gmail.com


Fraternally,
AYF Western Region
Central Executive

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Turkey seizes 'Iranian' weapons


Turkish authorities have seized weapons hidden on a Syria-bound train from Iran after Kurdish separatist fighters derailed it with a bomb, a prosecutor said.

The arms were found by authorities after the attack on the train on Friday near the town of Genc in southeastern Bingol province, Ismail Sari said on Wednesday.

The Iranian embassy issued a statement on Wednesday denying that the weapons belonged to Iran.

The bomb attack on the train coinicides with Turkey's military build-up on its border with Iraq, which Ankara says is necessary to limit activities of Kurdish separatist groups based in northern Iraq.

The private Dogan news agency said the weapons on the train included a rocket launch pad and 300 rockets.

Turkish authorities suspect Iran is using Turkey as a transit route to send arms to Hezbollah, the Shia group in Lebanon, via Syria.

Military build-up

Meanwhile, Turkey has continued to send military reinforcements to its border with Iraq, amid debate over whether to launch raids on bases of the Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK) in northern Iraq.


"The PKK must be eliminated as a problem between Iraq and Turkey," said Oguz Celikkol, Turkey's special envoy to Iraq, said on Wednesday.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's prime minister, on Tuesday called for the US and Iraq to destroy the PKK bases in northern Iraq.

He did not rule out a cross-border Turkish operation.

"Our patience has run out. The necessary steps will be taken when needed," Erdogan said.

'Turkey's business'

Asked whether Iraqi authorities had been informed about a possible cross-border Turkish operation, Levent Bilman, Turkey's foreign ministry spokesman, said the decision was "only Turkey's business."

"We do not have to inform anybody about the possibility of such an intervention," he said.

The Turkish military says up to 3,800 Kurdish separatist rebels are now based in Iraq, from where they launch cross-border operation on targets inside Turkey.

Turkish forces have fought Kurdish separatists in Turkey's southeast since the rebels took up arms in 1984, in a conflict that has killed thousands of people.

In Turkey, conspiracy theories actually hold, because… (1)

EKREM DUMANLI; Zaman Gazetesi

Conspiracy theories receive press in every country. However, in Turkey they receive more press, are more widespread and are actually more believable.

To understand the reasons for this is to take a step toward understanding politics in Turkey because the scenarios in this country, just as they are the fruits of imagination, are also based on reality. For this reason, they are also believable.

During the period leading to the 1960 military coup, there were some unbelievably strong allegations at hand. One example of such allegations was the claim that leftist youths had been captured by police and thrown into meat grinders. These allegations were a huge news item for days. Everyone who heard these allegations was completely horrified. But in reality, the actual names of these “revolutionary youths torn apart in meat grinders” were not known, nor could anyone say where this terrible event had taken place.

Nor could anyone have known these things because they were lies. This made-up news originated from some center, serving to alter the atmosphere in the country. Then when the conditions were ripe, it was time for the military coup to take place. After the 1960 military coup, the Turkish public had been strongly affected by this type of false news story.

Perhaps one of the most striking examples of this phenomenon was prior to the 1980 coup. Towards the end of the 1970s, Turkey was divided along lines of left and right. It was not possible to remain neutral or not being decisively on the right or on the left. Each side leveled accusations of treason at the other. When the armed struggles began, the left claimed it wanted to save the country from the fascist right. And the right believed it was protecting the country from the threat of communism.

There were armed clashes, bombings and assassinations. So much so that at the beginning of the 1980s, 5,000 of the nation’s youth had already been killed, and the daily average death toll from conflict had risen to 30. And in response to critical questions over why the military had “waited for so many people to die,” coup leader Gen. Kenan Evren replied with, “We waited for the conditions to be met.”

Thus on Sept. 12, 1980, the military, with Gen. Evren at its helm, took control of the country. Labor strikes, student protests, assassinations, bombings; everything, yes everything, came to a halt overnight. Years later, Süleyman Demirel, who had been prime minister during that period, asked, “With 30 people dying every day up until Sept. 11, 1980, how was it that on the morning of Sept. 13, everything stopped in one moment?”

Demirel was right to ask this. The many illegal organizations and groups, and the tens of thousands of militants, had their fighting cut short overnight, even though the government at the time gave the military very great power and authority before the coup.

What, then, was the authority they possessed that was not being used that brought the need for a coup to the forefront? This was a question debated for years in the Turkish public, and in the end, the following conclusion was reached: In the period before the 1980 military coup, the powers controlling the right and the left were coming from the same point. In the deadly acts each side was launching against the other, people were being guided from the same center. And the naive youth jumping into the scenario were unaware that they were simply pawns in the game. During the 1970s, former Prime Minister Bülent Ecevit used to talk about an organization called “Gladio.” Ecevit, whose own life was the target of assassination attempts many times, could never prove the existence of this “Gladio” group. But the majority of people in Turkey did believe his claims to be true.

Later, on Nov. 3, 1996, there was an odd traffic accident that took place in Turkey, and for many Turks, this accident came to represent a turning point. The car involved in the notorious accident in Susurluk contained a former leader from the right wing sought all over the world (Abdullah Çatlı), one top-level police official (Hüseyin Kocadağ) and a parliamentary deputy (Sedat Bucak).

It was said that there was strong evidence that Çatlı had been sent by the state abroad to incapacitate Armenian terrorists operating internationally. This was the same person who, before 1980, had been involved in bloody protests and who had been accused personally of being the cause for the deaths of so many leftist youth in Turkey.

Meanwhile, Police Chief Hüseyin Kocadağ, who died in the Susurluk accident, was known for his identity as a leftist and an Alevi. Thus the people of Turkey were shocked when a famous right-wing terrorist and a renowned leftist police commander were revealed to have been in the same car. The weapons present in the car, the fact that the car itself belonged to a deputy who was also the family head of an enormous clan from the Turkish East, the fact that an unknown woman was also present in the car... Everything turned in one moment into a mysterious puzzle and one which still hasn’t been solved.

Deputy chief of the Turkish Police Intelligence Bureau at the time, Hanefi Avcı, talked during a live television program of a “gladio” that had settled itself into the workings of the government. At that time, then-general Veli Küçük blamed Intelligence Bureau Chief Mehmet Eymür and current DYP leader Mehmet Ağar. According to Avcı, the structure that had rooted itself in the government was a triangle consisting of the military, police and politics. For saying these words, Avcı was arrested, but then later returned to his post, where he carries on to this day. But the curtains of secrecy have never lifted on this event because the people named in the Susurluk accident never came to court to give their testimonies.

There have, however, been frequent reminders of the gladio organization that former Prime Minister Ecevit used to mention so often because the phenomenon of unsolved murders has continued on while different groups in society become hostile to one another. Because of psychological wartime techniques, the people themselves have experienced polarization.

Suspicion in Turkey over gladios and gangs has carried on until today. And there are connections between some of the events we see occurring today and some of the secret structures within the government.

And with no transparency being endowed on any of these suspicions, every event that takes place in Turkey winds up with a question mark hanging over it.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Armenia: What's At Stake In Parliamentary Vote?

By Harry Tamrazian
Armenia -- A woman walks along a street of the Kond neighborhood of Yerevan, 08May2007
Yerevan residents have their doubts about the validity of the election's outcome.
(AFP)
May 11, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Harry Tamrazian, the head of RFE/RL's Armenian Service, discusses why Armenia's parliamentary elections are important -- and why they may not be clean:
Will Armenia have free and fair elections? Ask that question anywhere from the streets of Yerevan to a remote country village and the answer will usually be "no."

There have been 10 national polls since Armenian gained independence. Of those, eight failed to meet international standards for a clean and democratic vote. The sole exceptions came early on -- a referendum on independence and the first presidential elections, both in 1991.
Since then, vote-rigging, ballot-stuffing, and forged signatures have all become well-documented tactics in Armenia's electoral process. This year, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has already voiced concern about the election campaign, prompted by reliable reports of voter intimidation and bribery by pro-government party activists.
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian says a repeat of serious irregularities would be a "big blow" to Armenia's reputation -- one with more than just "moral" consequences.
The official mind-set in Yerevan seems to be that it's not only that the parties of power must win. The opposition must also lose. Opposition figures like Artur Baghdasarian and former Armenian Foreign Minister Aleksandr Arzumanian have in recent weeks been attacked for alleged treason or arrested on dubious charges. And the price tag for television advertising is unreasonably steep -- $300 a minute, a price that leaves many alternative voices off the air.
Perhaps the real question about the parliamentary elections is not who will win, or whether the vote will be fair, but why this vote matters.
In its 15 years of post-Soviet history, Armenian presidents have hired and fired nine out of the country's 11 prime ministers. After these elections, however, prime ministers will no longer be easy prey for the president.
The May 12 ballot will usher in a parliament with broader powers than the current one. According to Armenia's newly amended constitution, the next generation of lawmakers will have far greater control in appointing the head of the government. Whoever comprises the ruling majority will be able to effectively block any presidential nominee for the prime ministerial post.
To wit, whoever wins the parliamentary elections will be able to appoint a prime minister and use the administrative resources of incumbency to launch a successful bid for the next presidential elections, due to take place in early 2008.
That's why it's significant -- barring a surprise result that could only come with a truly clean election -- that the likely winner of the May 12 vote is the ruling Republican Party, led by the second-most powerful man in Armenia, Prime Minister (and former Defense Minister) Serzh Sarkisian.

Sarkisian has been a close associate of the current president, Robert Kocharian, for more than 20 years, and is generally expected to step up to the plate when Kocharian's second term expires next year.Kocharian, for his part, has announced he does not intend to be the youngest retiree in Armenia. (He is a relatively young 53.) His dilemma is much the same as the one facing Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is also nearing the end of his constitutionally mandated second term -- how does a former president maintain a major role in politics?
In Kocharian's case, it may be by stepping comfortably into the prime ministerial post. Many local observers believe this explains Kocharian's keen interest in the May 12 vote and his evident desire to build a power base in the new, more muscular legislature.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Genocide Recognition More for Benefit of Turkey than Armenia

The Turkish Embassy once again champions the Turkish proposal of establishing a "joint commission of historians" to investigate the issue of Armenian Genocide of 1915 (Re: "Turkish Offer of Joint Commission with Armenians Still on the Table." Letters, May 2). It is not clear from the letter how such a commission can be put together and produce results when Turkey refuses to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia, imposes illegal unilateral coercive economic measures against land-locked Armenia in a form of a blockade, deliberately destroys and distorts Armenian cultural heritage in Eastern Anatolia, and spends millions of dollars annually in a futile attempt to convince the world that it was Armenians who committed genocide against Turks.

How can we take the Turkish proposal seriously when impartial Turkish historians who dare voice opinions different from the state-imposed genocide denial are labeled traitors and have no other choice but to leave their own country? Will Turkey be ready to recall all those exiled historians and include them in the proposed commission, or will we have to deal with staunch genocide deniers only?

The Turkish notion of "equal suffering" of Armenians and Turks during the First World War is absolutely immoral. In a matter of weeks a whole nation disappeared without any trace from its historical homeland.

Nobody denies that thousands of Turks died during that war. But during the Second World War more than 10 million Germans died, too. Does that justify the Holocaust?

Turkey needs the recognition of the Armenian genocide more than Armenia. It needs it in order to come to terms with the most shameful page of its history, and to prove itself worthy of entering the European family of nations.

Armenia and Turkey are neighbours, and they eventually will have to normalize their relations. For the 16th year in a row, Armenia proposes to establish formal relations and to open the Armenian-Turkish border, the last surviving segment of the Iron Curtain. The time to stop this unfortunate counting of years is long overdue.

ARMAN AKOPIAN
Chargé d'Affaires
Embassy of Armenia, Canada

Vive la France! But what about Turkey?

AMANDA AKCAKOCA; Zaman Gazetesi

Nicolas Sarkozy’s victory on Sunday ushers in a new era of French politics. The son of a Hungarian immigrant who abandoned him and his brothers when they were small, Sarkozy has succeeded through sheer guts and determination.
Nowadays he is a man in a hurry. When he takes over from Jacques Chirac on May 16, he will have a long to-do list, including: kicking off his ambitious reform agenda including unemployment, economic growth, labor market regulations and immigration; moving along the infamous EU Constitutional Treaty -- Sarkozy favors a “mini-treaty” which would not have to go to public referendum. He wants to get it off his desk as soon as possible so that his first years in office are not bogged down by this ongoing problem; and, lastly, put France back on the world stage on which, according to Monsieur Sarkozy, it has played an unacceptably minor role over the last few years. However in many of France’s migrant communities his election was met with despair, resulting in a number of riots. Known for his heavy-handed policies on security and migration, Sarkozy suppressed riots in ethnically mixed suburbs in 2005, when he served as interior minister, during which time he infamously claimed he would work to “hose away the scum in France.” This made him a hugely unpopular figure with France’s North African communities, with many feeling they were being treated like second-class citizens. He has a huge mountain to climb here.

Coming to Turkey, it is well known that Sarkozy does not support Turkish membership of the EU, claiming that it would be the end of political Europe. Rather he favors, as does his counterpart in Germany, some type of “privileged partnership” and the development of a “Mediterranean Community,” whatever that might be -- he has not expanded on that gem as yet. I am not convinced that Sarkozy will launch himself into an all-out assault to bring Turkey’s talks to an end. More likely he will put the issue on a back-burner and deal with more pressing domestic concerns first. In any event he will have to abide by the decision taken by the European Council in Copenhagen and listen to France’s influential business community, who are strong supporters of Turkish membership. Sarkozy is a pragmatic man and will not want to rock the EU boat just as he has climbed aboard. However at the same time France may look for ways to further slow the accession process for Turkey, and when France takes over the EU Presidency in the second half of 2008 they will probably sit on their hands.

More important in Turkey’s relations with France is whether Sarkozy decides to ratify the bill, passed by the French Parliament in October, making it a crime to deny the Armenian genocide. One of Sarkozy’s closest friends and advisers is Patrick Devedjian, a high profile member of Armenia’s diaspora community. To what extent he will influence Sarkozy remains to be seen. France is home to a large Armenian immigrant community, with up to 500,000 people of Armenian descent. The community is a powerful political lobby. Sarkozy will have to perform a balancing act as he needs to guard French bilateral relations with Turkey -- particularly business interests -- while at the same time keeping the Armenian lobby and others happy. Therefore even if Sarkozy does not ratify the bill he will certainly attempt to use the whole genocide issue as a bargaining tool whenever the opportunity arises.

In any event the first challenge Sarkozy will face will be the parliamentary elections in June. Securing a workable majority in the National Assembly would greatly ease the passage of Mr. Sarkozy’s planned reforms. Mr. Sarkozy is a passionate, dynamic human-dynamo who is both smart and charismatic. Being the president of a country that is known for being stubborn and unpredictable, Sarkozy will certainly need all these qualities.

Monday, May 7, 2007

Socialist İnternational must expel the CHP

SAHIN ALPAY; Zaman Gazetesi

Last week I published a column in the Zaman daily calling on the Socialist International (SI) to expel the Republican People’s Party (CHP) from membership. I would like to explain for foreign observers of Turkish politics why I really believe the CHP, with its current leadership and policies, has absolutely no place in the global organization of social democratic, socialist and labor parties of the world.
The “Ethical Principles” adopted at the 22nd congress of SI held in Sao Paolo in September 2003 stated the following: “The Socialist International member parties defend pluralistic democracy. This means allowing citizens to make their choice at free, coordinated and clear elections; changing of governments in a peaceful way and providing freedom for citizens; showing respect to the rights of minorities and individuals; standing for an independent and neutral judiciary system based on the rule of law, a free and pluralist press, and administrating the parties in a democratic way.”

If SI is to remain true to its “Ethical Principles,” it has to conclude that the CHP of Turkey as led by Deniz Baykal no longer deserves membership in the organization, mainly due to the following reasons:

The CHP is not at all a party that is “administrated in a democratic way.” Baykal and his clique have established autocratic rule over the party, eliminated all dissenting views and members from the party and alienated all true social democrats.

The Baykal clique has turned the CHP increasingly away from the people and basically aligned it with the bureaucratic elites. It has increasingly turned the party away from social democracy towards a 1930s-style Kemalism that refuses to recognize the ethnic and religious diversity and cultural rights of Turkey’s citizens and fully supports an authoritarian type of state secularism that does not separate state and religion, and restricts religious rights and freedoms.

The Baykal clique is not only disrespectful of democratic rights, but increasingly of democratic processes. It has made the party a spokesman for the civilian-military bureaucracy which continues to think that the Turkish people at large are not mature enough for democracy and wants to preserve its tutelary powers over the regime.

The Baykal clique has pursued a policy of polarizing the electorate over the issue of secularism, with a view towards increasing his party’s sinking share of the popular vote. His statements have led many to conclude that he is using the threat of military intervention to achieve his political goals.

Baykal has not uttered a single word against the memorandum issued by the military threatening the parliament against the election of Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul as president and thus has tacitly supported the military’s intervention in the democratic process. Baykal and his clique have openly opposed “pluralist democracy” SI stands for. One of the vice chairmen of the party who most clearly reflects the widespread militarism among the ranks of the CHP came out and said he is in full agreement with the memorandum, which states among other things that: “All who do not share the understanding ‘Happy is he who says he is a Turk’ are enemies of the republic and will remain so,” in a thinly veiled reference to citizens of Kurdish origin who defend their ethnic identity. Baykal’s CHP is in growing agreement with nationalist parties in support of continued suppression of Kurdish identity.

During the recent crisis over presidential election, Baykal called on the Constitutional Court to declare unconstitutional the election process that has been used to elect the last three presidents and warned the court that the country would otherwise risk domestic conflict and “clashes.” He has thus displayed his disrespect for an “independent and neutral judicial system based on the rule of law.”

In summary, the views and policies of Baykal’s CHP are in open conflict with principles of both social and political democracy. There may be nothing wrong within Turkey with the CHP being a statist and nationalist party, but it surely has no right to describe itself as a “social democratic” party, and this needs to be made clear to them by SI. The CHP’s expulsion from SI may perhaps help end the Baykal clique’s domination of this important actor of Turkish politics and open the way for democratic reform within it.

Sunday, May 6, 2007




'Never again' for Armenians too

Several American Jewish groups abandon their anti-genocide zeal when it comes to Turkey's massacre of Armenians.
By Daniel Sokatch and David N. Myers, DANIEL SOKATCH is executive director of the Progressive Jewish Alliance. DAVID N. MYERS teaches Jewish history at UCLA.
May 1, 2007

THIS YEAR, Congress established April 15 as Holocaust Memorial Day, commemorating the Nazi genocide of European Jewry. Just nine days later, on April 24, Armenians throughout the world observed the commemoration of their great tragedy: the massacre of as many as 1.5 million Armenians at the hands of the Turks that began in 1915.

In many ways, it was the 20th century's first genocide that helped set the stage for its largest, including Rwanda and now Darfur. Adolf Hitler reportedly said, on the eve of his invasion of Poland in 1939, "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

For the last 60 years, the Jewish community has labored to avoid granting Hitler, in the words of philosopher Emil Fackenheim, "a posthumous victory." Jews have taken as their motto "never again," and most tend to understand that this charge refers to all of humanity, not only to fellow Jews. One of the last surviving leaders of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, Simha "Kazik" Rotem, once said that the central lesson of the Holocaust to him was that the Jewish people should stand vigilant against genocidal acts directed at any people.

This is why it is troubling that some major Jewish organizations have lined up in support of Turkey's efforts to keep the U.S. Congress from recognizing the Armenian massacres as an act of genocide. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL), the American Jewish Committee (AJC), the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA) and B'nai B'rith International recently conveyed a letter from the Turkish Jewish community opposing a resolution recognizing the genocide.

The ADL and the JINSA also added their own statements of opposition, suggesting that the massacre of Armenians was a matter for historians, not legislators, to decide.

The American Jewish community has insisted, and rightly so, that the U.S. Congress, the United Nations and other governmental bodies formally commemorate the Holocaust. Why should Jews not insist on the same in this case, especially given the widespread scholarly consensus that what happened to the Armenians from 1915 to 1923 was genocide? After all, the man who coined the term "genocide" to refer to the Holocaust — the Polish-Jewish lawyer Raphael Lemkin — cited the Armenian massacres as a precedent.

The unfortunate and well-known answer to the question is that Turkey has fiercely opposed efforts to call the Armenian massacres "genocide." Moreover, it has asked its friends to help beat back the attempts at historical recognition.

Jewish opposition to recognizing the Armenian genocide comes mainly from a desire to safeguard the important strategic relationship between Turkey and Israel. Alone among the world's Muslim nations, Turkey has forged close military, political and economic ties with Israel. In addition, Jews remember with a deep sense of gratitude that Turkey served as an important haven for their forebears fleeing persecution, from the time of the Spanish Expulsion in 1492 to the dark days of Nazism and beyond. And it is not just that Turkey has been kind to Israel and the Jews. It is a critically important U.S. ally in a dangerous region racked by religious extremism.

Nobody is suggesting that Jews forget Turkey's historic friendship. But it is a mistake for Jews — or, for that matter, anyone — to surrender the moral imperative of condemning genocide in the hopes of avoiding a perceived, but by no means necessary, strategic loss. Similarly, it would be a mistake for Turkey to hinge its own strategic interests on the denial of past criminal acts. Coming to terms with the past, as democratic Germany has done in the aftermath of the Holocaust and South Africa in the wake of apartheid, is the best path to political legitimacy.

Turkey, a trusted ally and friend of the Jews and the United States, must come to terms with its past for its own sake. It is that battle that leading Turkish intellectuals, including Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk and martyred Armenian activist Hrant Dink, have been waging so nobly. We should do all in our power to strengthen the hands of these figures and avoid the abyss of historical revisionism.

Sixty years (and millions of historical documents) later, the world still has to contend with those who deny the Holocaust. We need only recall the shocking words and deeds of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on this score.

In response to such denials, all decent-minded people, and Jews in particular, must continue to declare loudly "never again" — not only to future genocides but also to the attempted denial of past genocides, regardless of who the perpetrators or victims are.